Cardinal backs limited condom
use
Cardinal
Martini is one of the Church's most prominent leaders
One of the Roman Catholic Church's most distinguished cardinals
has publicly backed the use of condoms among married couples to
prevent Aids transmission.
Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini said that in couples where one had
HIV/Aids, which could pass to the partner, the use of condoms
was "a lesser evil".
The Vatican says condoms should never be used, even to stop Aids
spreading from one married partner to another.
The Church teaches that abstinence is the best way to tackle
disease.
Growing issue
Cardinal Martini, who used to be Archbishop of Milan, made the
comments in an interview with the Italian weekly magazine l'Espresso.
In it he says that the fight against Aids, which has caused more
than three million deaths, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa, must
be pursued by all available means.
The Vatican has made no official comment on the article, in which
the cardinal also raises the possibility of single mothers adopting
abandoned children.
But the BBC's David Willey in Rome says that such matters are
an increasingly important subject of discussion in Church circles.
According to insistent reports, Cardinal Martini was a close
runner-up in last year's papal election.
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